One of Englands grand masters of history provides a clear and persuasive interpretation of the creation of respectable society in Victorian Britain. Integrating a vast amount of research previously hidden in obscure or academic journals, he covers not only the economy, social structure, and patterns of authority, but also marriage and the family, childhood, homes and houses, work and play.
By 1900 the structure of British society had become more orderly and well-defined than it had been in the 1830s and 1840s, but the result, F. M. L. Thompson shows, was fragmentation into a multiplicity of sections or classes with differing standards and notions of respectability. Each group operated its own social controls, based on what it considered acceptable or unacceptable conduct. This internalized and diversified respectability was not the cohesive force its middle-class and evangelical proponents had envisioned. The Victorian experience thus bequeathed structural problems, identity problems, and authority problems to the twentieth century, with which Britain is grappling.
This is a major study of Victorian society by one of our leading historians, the product of immensely wide reading and mature consideration. It offers a synthesis of the mass of new research material which has appeared since G. M. Youngs
Portrait of an Ageand G. D. H. Coles
The Common Peoplehalf a century ago& Each chapter is an excellent, authoritative and elegant r?sum?, and will be invaluable to the student and of much interest to what used to be called the intelligent lay reader.Anyone with more than a passing interest in nineteenth-century Britain should be grateful for
The Rise of Respectable Society& [It is] culled from a broad and scrupulous reading of the relevant historical literature& With its generous scope and its well-considered selection of details, the rewards of&[an] energetic perusal of
The Rise of Respectable Societycan be great.In both contentlcĄ